BLUE
SNnevvskayaa00.bsky.social

𝑨𝒚𝒂𝒏𝒂𝒎𝒊 𝑹𝒆𝒊 𝒂𝒏𝒅 𝑺𝒐𝒖𝒓𝒚𝒖𝒖 𝑨𝒔𝒌𝒂 𝑳𝒂𝒏𝒈𝒍𝒆𝒚..🪽🪽 #evangelion#AyanamiRei#SouryuuAskaLangley#art

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MMqueerthing.bsky.social

gotta get some links out to Langley

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Kkaitlynmagic.bsky.social

Cosplayers welcome on Bluesky! 🫶 Let's do a quote train with cosplays showing off our ~☆range☆~ Harley Quinn ❤️🖤 Khal Drogo ☀️ Asuka Langley 🤖 Ms. Marvel ⚡️

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Mmetallinemenace.bsky.social

asuka langley SORYU 💜

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Vvsevlez.bsky.social

Asuka Langley tired WIP

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PBportlandbirdobs.bsky.social

YbWarbler at Langley Close, Southwell, per Bruce & Roger

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BCdbcalertrepeater.bsky.social

#DBCAlert: Highway 1 (TransCanada Highway), eastbound. Road cleared at Exit 58: 200 St (Langley - District).

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rog78.bsky.social

Yellow Browed in garden at 1 Langley Close Portland at11.55am.

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JRjrboehnke.bsky.social

10/x Thanks for reading in case you made it this far. I noticed that I forgot speakers' affiliations in some of the posts, so please find here again the abstract. And once again links to the book global.oup.com/academic/pro...rdcu.be/dXACh#HRQL#ISOQOL#PhilSky

Patient-reported measurement is the idea that patient perspectives should play an evidentiary role in determining how effective a drug is taken to be, the degree to which a hospital provides good quality care or improvements in patient-clinician communication. This idea may sound prosaic, but in fact it’s nothing short of revolutionary. It says, patient views matter – not as an afterthought, and not only at the bedside, but in the nuts and bolts of creating our evidence base, and thus in health-care decision-making. But patient-reported measures present a puzzle: How can measurement, which relies on standardization, represent patient perspectives, which, if not idiosyncratic are at least various and changeable? This tension is explored in Patient-Centered Measurement (McClimans, L 2024, Oxford University Press) a recent book that combines philosophy and conceptual questions from HRQoL research. This symposium brings “all different together” four HRQoL researchers and four philosophers into dialogue with one another as they discuss their different perspectives on four chapters of this book. This symposium thus creates a multi-directional dialogue: between HRQoL researchers and this text, between HRQoL researchers and other philosophers, and between the HRQoL community and philosophical concepts.

Melanie Hawkins, PhD, Swinburne University of Technology, Melbourne, Australia
Sebastian Rodriguez Duque, PhD Candidate, McGill University, Montreal, Quebec, Canada
Jan R. Boehnke, PhD, School of Health Sciences, University of Dundee, Dundee, United Kingdom
Alessandra Basso, PhD, London School of Economics, United Kingdom
Richard Sawatzky, PhD RN, Trinity Western University, Langley, British Columbia, Canada
Leah McClimans, PhD, University of South Carolina, Columbia, South Carolina, United States
Kevin Weinfurt, PhD, Duke University School of Medicine, Durham, North Carolina, United States
Rebecca L. Jackson, PhD, Durham University, Durham, United Kingdom
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